Saturated calomel electrode

From formulasearchengine
Revision as of 20:50, 29 January 2014 by en>Monkbot (References: Fix CS1 deprecated date parameter errors)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
For other uses of the term, see Large set (disambiguation).

In Ramsey theory, a set S of natural numbers is considered to be a large set if and only if Van der Waerden's theorem can be generalized to assert the existence of arithmetic progressions with common difference in S. That is, S is large if and only if every finite partition of the natural numbers has a cell containing arbitrarily long arithmetic progressions having common differences in S.

Examples

Properties

Necessary conditions for largeness include:

  • If S is large, for any natural number n, S must contain infinitely many multiples of n.
  • If S={s1,s2,s3,} is large, it is not the case that sk≥3sk-1 for k≥ 2.

Two sufficient conditions are:

The first sufficient condition implies that if S is a thick set, then S is large.

Other facts about large sets include:

If S is large, then for any m, S{x:x0(modm)} is large.

2-large and k-large sets

A set is k-large, for a natural number k > 0, when it meets the conditions for largeness when the restatement of van der Waerden's theorem is concerned only with k-colorings. Every set is either large or k-large for some maximal k. This follows from two important, albeit trivially true, facts:

  • k-largeness implies (k-1)-largeness for k>1
  • k-largeness for all k implies largeness.

It is unknown whether there are 2-large sets that are not also large sets. Brown, Graham, and Landman (1999) conjecture that no such set exists.

See also

References

  • Brown, Tom, Ronald Graham, & Bruce Landman. On the Set of Common Differences in van der Waerden's Theorem on Arithmetic Progressions. Canadian Math Bulletin, Vol 42 (1), 1999. p 25-36. pdf

External links